Text conversations, constantly. I know there are girls who love guys constantly texting them, but not me. Are you trying to make plans with me, tell me a funny story about your day? That's great, I'll take it. But if you're texting "hey" and "what's new" with no purpose ALL DAY LONG, I'm sorry but its not cute. Small talk sucks, small text talk is the worst.

In terms of representation of babies (or the infant Christ in particular), the early renaissance was the first time artists began to be interested in portraying the subjects as somewhat realistic and human. Meaning, we start seeing rolls of baby fat, an emotional connection between the mother and child, etc. before the renaissance, that was not valued. Babies were essentially depicted as little men, and the child Jesus more as a static divine icon than a humanized figure. A lot of the paintings on that blog are from this time period, where humanism was emerging, but the more medieval tendencies are also still discernible.

As for the women - I'd state generally that a bulbous woman was the ideal figure in the Italian renaissance. I'd point you to works by Parmigianino whose female figures took this hour glass figure to a notable extreme. He was a mannerist, and was notorious for elongating his figures.

Just as an interesting side note, a large forehead was also considered very fashionable in renaissance Florence in the fifteenth century. Women would purposefully recede their hairlines - and so we see a lot of this depicted in painting as well.

Follow me through a city of frost covered angels
I swear I have nothing to prove
I just want to dance in your tangles
To give me some reason to move
But to take on the world at all angles
Requires a strength I can't use
So I'll meet you up high in your anger
Of all that is hoping and waiting for you